2009
After the Maoists came to power, reintegration of the Maoist combatants and moving ahead with the peace process became a priority. But most of these remained neglected as underlying issues of ethnicity, gender and struggle for power persisted.
The leading political parties: NC and UML were against the integration of Maoists into the Nepal Army. Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal accused the opposition of the lack of support. Analyst Dhrub Kumar in his column (left) for issue #432 wrote:
‘As long as there are two armies, the peace process and constitution-writing will be in danger. The responsibility lies with the Maoists and the head of government to convince the coalition partners and the opposition through a negotiation process by first building trust. In the present situation, the Maoists can’t do much on their own. They have to work with the other parties and for this they must make the others trust them.’
Prime Minister Dahal had his own plans, he tried to remove Army Chief Rookmangud Katuwal and replace him with a pro-Maoist general. President Ram Baran Yadav overturned that decision, and with a nod from New Delhi got Dahal to resign.
Civilians are the primary victims in most wars, and in the Maoist conflict it is Nepali women who suffered sexual violence. Female guerrillas made up a third of the Maoist militia, but many of them became single mothers after their ex-guerrilla husbands divorced them following the end of the war.
Around 15,000 cases remain unresolved in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and the Commission of Investigation on Enforced Disappeared Persons (CIEDP).
The transitional justice process remains flawed, with women having to bear the repercussions of the war at the extreme end.
There were reportedly 1,000 young mothers in the seven UNMIN-supervised camps and 21 sub-camps all over the country. Many women warriors gave birth in camp, and instead of carrying assault rifles were cradling babies.
In issue #439, ‘Children of the Revolution’ revealed a former guerilla giving birth to her second child in an UNMIN demobilisation camp, where her first child was born malnourished. Lack of medical facilities made it more difficult for expecting and new mothers.
Many Nepali women were widowed and had to restart their lives post conflict. But, the government in its 2009-10 budget made a proposal to provide Rs50,000 ‘reward’ to a man if he married a war widow.
In response, Mallika Aryal in #470 wrote:
‘This is one of the most callous, thoughtless and rash decisions the government of Nepal has taken in recent years. As if women didn’t already have enough to struggle against. Marriage is a deeply personal decision, and linking that decision to money demeans women.’
As it turned out, when a war that was fought to liberate women ended, so did the promise of emancipation. Women were fighting for their rights then, and they are still fighting for their rights now.